โFeb-13-2014 07:56 AM
โJun-05-2014 06:10 PM
โJun-05-2014 06:07 PM
โJun-05-2014 06:04 PM
Guysakar wrote:tatest wrote:
Don't expect to find a more "modern" gasoline RV generator with "Eco" mode and reduced idle speeds. Even Honda's RV generators (as opposed to portable) are constant speed.
There is a reason for this, RV onboard generators are primarily used to power air conditioning, and a "constant" speed generator uses rotational energy to handle the surge of A/C compressor startup, slowing slightly to give the engine time to power up for the load. An inverter genset running reduced idle simply has no energy source to supply that surge of power (which might be 3X to 6X the rated output), which is why Honda tells you not to use Eco for air conditioning.
Some high-end RV/Marine gensets, all diesel that I know of, have inverters, but the inverters are rated for the A/C starting loads, and some are part of a hybrid system that stores electrical energy in a battery bank to provide the surge of power that the engine cannot supply until it spins up.
So you have essentially given yourself a set of rules that say you will not use the on-board genset in a low-cost motorhome.
I disagree. If a Honda EU2000i can start most 8K BTU AC units on Eco mode (and even some 10K units) I highly doubt that a 4K W genset will have trouble starting a 1350 BTU on an eco mode type setting.
What's more, all an RV company has to do is put a hard start capacitor on the AC and it is a near guarantee that it will run the AC in eco mode.
Plus, you can take one of these portable generators and place them on the dining room table during dinner and (other than the carbon dioxide poisoning) not really be bothered by it.
Why can't they put this tech in an RV gen?
I just cannot make since of it. The tech has been there for a quiet, fuel efficient generator for sometime, yet you have to buy the most expensive of rigs to get it?
I'm going to go down to the dealership and listen to gens tomorrow, but I have been listening to them on videos just now and, coming from the Honda EU series, I don't think I am going to be very happy.
โMay-12-2014 08:57 AM
โApr-20-2014 02:11 PM
Dutch_12078 wrote:
Customer demand drives what equipment is offered on RV's at what cost. If there was enough demand for so called "eco-mode" generators in RV's they would be offered, at least as an option. For me personally, I find it much more annoying to listen to a generator throttling up from idle every time the load changes than listening to the low rumble of my 7KW Onan's near constant 1800 RPM.
โApr-20-2014 12:46 PM
โApr-20-2014 12:28 PM
Guysakar wrote:tatest wrote:
Don't expect to find a more "modern" gasoline RV generator with "Eco" mode and reduced idle speeds. Even Honda's RV generators (as opposed to portable) are constant speed.
There is a reason for this, RV onboard generators are primarily used to power air conditioning, and a "constant" speed generator uses rotational energy to handle the surge of A/C compressor startup, slowing slightly to give the engine time to power up for the load. An inverter genset running reduced idle simply has no energy source to supply that surge of power (which might be 3X to 6X the rated output), which is why Honda tells you not to use Eco for air conditioning.
Some high-end RV/Marine gensets, all diesel that I know of, have inverters, but the inverters are rated for the A/C starting loads, and some are part of a hybrid system that stores electrical energy in a battery bank to provide the surge of power that the engine cannot supply until it spins up.
So you have essentially given yourself a set of rules that say you will not use the on-board genset in a low-cost motorhome.
I disagree. If a Honda EU2000i can start most 8K BTU AC units on Eco mode (and even some 10K units) I highly doubt that a 4K W genset will have trouble starting a 1350 BTU on an eco mode type setting.
What's more, all an RV company has to do is put a hard start capacitor on the AC and it is a near guarantee that it will run the AC in eco mode.
Plus, you can take one of these portable generators and place them on the dining room table during dinner and (other than the carbon dioxide poisoning) not really be bothered by it.
Why can't they put this tech in an RV gen?
I just cannot make since of it. The tech has been there for a quiet, fuel efficient generator for sometime, yet you have to buy the most expensive of rigs to get it?
I'm going to go down to the dealership and listen to gens tomorrow, but I have been listening to them on videos just now and, coming from the Honda EU series, I don't think I am going to be very happy.
โFeb-13-2014 10:59 PM
tatest wrote:
Don't expect to find a more "modern" gasoline RV generator with "Eco" mode and reduced idle speeds. Even Honda's RV generators (as opposed to portable) are constant speed.
There is a reason for this, RV onboard generators are primarily used to power air conditioning, and a "constant" speed generator uses rotational energy to handle the surge of A/C compressor startup, slowing slightly to give the engine time to power up for the load. An inverter genset running reduced idle simply has no energy source to supply that surge of power (which might be 3X to 6X the rated output), which is why Honda tells you not to use Eco for air conditioning.
Some high-end RV/Marine gensets, all diesel that I know of, have inverters, but the inverters are rated for the A/C starting loads, and some are part of a hybrid system that stores electrical energy in a battery bank to provide the surge of power that the engine cannot supply until it spins up.
So you have essentially given yourself a set of rules that say you will not use the on-board genset in a low-cost motorhome.
โFeb-13-2014 06:37 PM
โFeb-13-2014 03:39 PM
โFeb-13-2014 11:58 AM
Guysakar wrote:
OK, that is what I was looking for. I am familiar with the Honda EU2000i, which reduces the RPM's under light load, etc...
You are saying that most motor home generators just run at a constant RPM regardless of load?
So what does that do for fuel consumption? I assume that motor home generators are nowhere comparable to portable generators, then.
I wonder why they can't use the same tech that is in the portable ones in a motor home.
So on a 4K watt Onan, you think 1/2 gallon an hour?
It might be more cost effective to just buy a portable gen and never even mess with the onboard gen, if doing a lot of dry camping.
A Honda 3000 (peak) 2800 (constant) watt gets .17 gallons an hour at 1/4 load and .47 at max load.
โFeb-13-2014 10:16 AM
โFeb-13-2014 08:20 AM
โFeb-13-2014 08:19 AM
Guysakar wrote:
Hi, thanks for your reply. I wasn't talking about the state of the generator, but how the generator was designed.
Some of the older motor home generators ran at a constant rpm and did not cycle down when load was low, resulting in poor fuel consumption.
And some of the older ones are much louder than the newer ones.